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London Copper rises as Dollar drifts lower

London Copper rises as Dollar drifts lower

The copper price in London increased slightly on Monday, following a slight decline in the dollar. However, President Donald Trump's renewed threat of tariffs halted gains.

As of 0211 GMT, the benchmark copper price on London Metal Exchange was up by 0.2% to $9,465.5 per metric tonne.

In early Asian trading, the U.S. Dollar pared its four-week gains as markets digested an unexpected downgrade in the credit rating of the U.S. Government and as lingering tensions over trade weighed on sentiment.

The greenback price of commodities is cheaper for buyers who hold other currencies.

Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury secretary, said on Sunday in interviews that Trump would impose tariffs on trading partners who do not negotiate "in good faith" when it comes to deals at the same rate that he had threatened last month.

BMI, an arm of Fitch Solutions, said that Trump's unpredictable policymaking poses a persistent risk to the metal price forecasts for the next few months.

Other London metals include aluminium, which fell by 0.2%, to $2476.5 per ton. Zinc slipped 0.04%, to $2690.5; lead rose 0.3%, to $2,000; and nickel, which dropped 0.3%, to $15,595. Tin increased 0.5% to $22,965.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's (SHFE) most-traded contract for copper rose by 0.8%, to $10,770.53 per ton.

The SHFE aluminium price was down by 0.2% at 20,110 yuan per ton. Zinc fell by 0.4% to 22,445 Yuan. Lead dropped by 0.3% to 16,885 Yuan. Nickel declined 0.8% to 123,750 Yuan. Tin eased up 0.2% to 264,860 Yuan. ($1 = 7.2132 yuan). (Reporting and editing by Sumana Niandy.

(source: Reuters)